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Evidence for coexistence of dopamine and CCK in meso-limbic neurones

Abstract

Vanderhaeghen et al.1 reported the occurrence of gastrin-like immunoreactivity in the mammalian brain. Subsequent studies have revealed that this immunoreactivity corresponded mainly to the COOH-terminal octapeptide of cholecystokinin (CCK-8), which has a COOH-terminal pentapeptide identical to gastrin2–7. Also, two peptides resembling the NH- and the COOH-terminal tetrapeptide fragments of CCK-8 are present in the central nervous system (CNS)8. Using COOH-terminal-specific antisera raised to gastrin and/or CCK, the distribution of CCK neurones has been described with immunohistochemical techniques. Although high numbers of cells and nerve terminals are found in cortical areas, the CCK systems are also present in most other parts of the brain and spinal cord9–14. In the CNS, true gastrin molecules, gastrin-17 and gastrin-34, have been located only in the neurohypophysis, hypothalamus15 and occasionally in the medulla oblongata (unpublished results). We describe here the occurrence of peptides in meso-limbic dopamine neurones in the rat brain. Evidence has also been obtained that mesencephalic dopamine neurones in the human brain contain similar peptides.

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Hökfelt, T., Rehfeld, J., Skirboll, L. et al. Evidence for coexistence of dopamine and CCK in meso-limbic neurones. Nature 285, 476–478 (1980). https://doi.org/10.1038/285476a0

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